Cancers (Jan 2024)

Cultivable Microbiome Approach Applied to Cervical Cancer Exploration

  • Irma Berenice Mulato-Briones,
  • Ismael Olan Rodriguez-Ildefonso,
  • Julián Antonio Jiménez-Tenorio,
  • Patricia Isidra Cauich-Sánchez,
  • María del Socorro Méndez-Tovar,
  • Gerardo Aparicio-Ozores,
  • María Yicel Bautista-Hernández,
  • Juan Francisco González-Parra,
  • Jesús Cruz-Hernández,
  • Ricardo López-Romero,
  • Teresita María del Rosario Rojas-Sánchez,
  • Raúl García-Palacios,
  • Ónix Garay-Villar,
  • Teresa Apresa-García,
  • Juan López-Esparza,
  • Daniel Marrero,
  • Juan Arturo Castelán-Vega,
  • Alicia Jiménez-Alberto,
  • Mauricio Salcedo,
  • Rosa María Ribas-Aparicio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16020314
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 2
p. 314

Abstract

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Traditional microbiological methodology is valuable and essential for microbiota composition description and microbe role assignations at different anatomical sites, including cervical and vaginal tissues; that, combined with molecular biology strategies and modern identification approaches, could give a better perspective of the microbiome under different circumstances. This pilot work aimed to describe the differences in microbiota composition in non-cancer women and women with cervical cancer through a culturomics approach combining culture techniques with Vitek mass spectrometry and 16S rDNA sequencing. To determine the possible differences, diverse statistical, diversity, and multivariate analyses were applied; the results indicated a different microbiota composition between non-cancer women and cervical cancer patients. The Firmicutes phylum dominated the non-cancer (NC) group, whereas the cervical cancer (CC) group was characterized by the predominance of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria phyla; there was a depletion of lactic acid bacteria, an increase in the diversity of anaerobes, and opportunistic and non-typical human microbiota isolates were present. In this context, we hypothesize and propose a model in which microbial composition and dynamics may be essential for maintaining the balance in the cervical microenvironment or can be pro-oncogenesis microenvironmental mediators in a process called Ying-Yang or have a protagonist/antagonist microbiota role.

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